After a first batch that included a Foursquare for dogs, apps that allow you to order food without leaving bed and others that let you feel the vibe of a place before you arrive, today we present the second round of entrants to the AppMyCity! competition. Here are the Spanish, Portuguese and French-language entrants:

Hackity allows you to identify what you don't like about your city, post it anonymously and offer your opinions about how to change it. Examples include reporting a broken paving slab, a pothole or a "flowerless garden". A similar idea inspires Trumpit, a crowdsourcing app that allows citizens to skip the official channels to demand changes and improvements.

Beender, meanwhile, focuses on highlighting the good bits that might have gone unnoticed. The idea was born in Santiago, Chile, as a 'graffiti tagging app' for neighbours and local communities, and quickly evolved into an app that allows users from around the world to upload geolocated 'virtual stickers' about interesting things they've noticed, targeted to people in the area.

And now for the Airbnb for parking spots. Parquéate is a Colombian app that makes it easy to find, review and, if you own one, share parking spots. Pretty useful for badly congested cities.

Menu do Dia is a food app which focuses on dishes rather than restaurants, taking a creative approach to the 'menu of the day' concept. Every day, the app offers a curated menu of first course, second course, dessert and drink, each taken from different establishments. From there, you can save your favourite dishes – those you have tried and those you're looking forward to – get the recipes and create your own gastronomic guide.

Tickethoy – available in Buenos Aires, Santiago and soon in Rio de Janeiro – is a last-minute-plans facilitator: it allows you to browse events, find out what your friends are attending and buy tickets easily and, a key point, without needing to print them.

French entry YesWeMum, meanwhile, aims to "make mums' lives easier". It tells you what restaurants, hotels or tube stations are buggy-friendly, and where to find baby-changing facilities, with recommendations "from mum to mum" – their words –.